Spitting Madness

Paul McGowan War Child image small 3in wideI’m sure I remember someone writing about Monica Dolan’s “spitting madness” in her portrayal of Rosemary West in Appropriate Adult.  This term makes me think about one of the table installation pieces Paul McGowan produced in the 90s.  The piece makes me recall those relationships that we have all been in but cannot walk away from.

I wrote to Paul to discuss how he conceived his works in particular the table and his War Child pieces and this was his reply.

“I spent 3 years developing the War Child works.  It was a very disturbing body of work to develop as everything was based on original source material.  All the images were constructed from photos of harrowing scenes of violence and devastation as a result of war and how children were caught up and used in the process.

If you look at the heads on the figures they are actually made up from bits of gun barrels and one of the mouths that is used repeatedly on these biomorphic heads was actually developed from a 12 year old Palestinian child’s mouth. The boy was shot while he sucked a sweet.  He still had the sweet in his mouth when he died and in the images it looks like a tongue.  That work looked into child prostitution and rape which are by products of war and then the conversion of children into soldiers.  After I completed that body of work I said to myself never again and I spent the next few years pursuing less aggressive subject matter.  I’ve always been haunted by that series and now years later I’m going to delve back into the horror of war and produce a series of works for the Stop The War Organisation in London.

Paul McGowan table small 3in wideWhen I get asked about my early works that were produced pre internet they are devoid of the usual dialogue that’s readily available and recorded in precise detail of how I was thinking at the time.  So when I get asked about a piece it’s usually the case where people describe how it looked from some old memory and I tend to make around 5 or 6 variations of each piece and I can never remember the titles correctly but I usually can recall the series title.  The red table came from a series titled “Send and Receive” they did have individual titles within that but the 90s was a long time ago and it was a very blurry time for me.

For me the table was always about how people self analyse themselves and strive to perfect and understand their life.  The conjoined chair made it impossible to slide out so you can be seated and the sheet of glass that divided either side of the table only gave you a faint transparent reflection of yourself.  The speakers were embedded into each side of the table and just played a faint echo of whatever sound was being produced in the vicinity of the table at that time whether it’s footsteps or people’s voices.  The bowl that was embedded into the table surface always remained empty, I liked it like that because people always had to try and fill it.  That piece always had a profound effect on people.  As a matter of fact that piece was stored away and was stolen when art thieves raided my studio in 2011.”

Paul McGowan children skipping small 3in wideYou will find Paul McGowan frequently exhibiting in London and other places.  His more recent work, ‘The side effects of skipping’ is to be exhibited at The Mall Gallery in London in November as part of the discerning eye series.  I asked Paul how he conceived this piece.

“The drawing started life as a 1950s American photo of two white children skipping and I changed the racial status of the photo and drew it as a black girl and white boy skipping together as it was something you wouldn’t see back then.”  It was amazing how the image totally changed just by making a few subtle adjustments.  A lot of my new drawings reflect this new way of working for me.  My current body of work is going to take another maybe two years until it’s ready for release and that’s for the ‘Stop The War’ organisation.  I think it’s the best work I’ve ever produced.  It’s definitely going to be my last major body of work.  Actually I’ve said that before and there’s always just one more.”

http://www.paul-mcgowan.com/

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B7 isn’t the be all and end all

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Casey Bailey’s Waiting at Bloomsbury ParCasey Bailey collage for Instagramk starts with Marbles “Green over orange, over green,” and immediately I think of the Northern Ireland conflict and the Birmingham pub bombs.  I was 9 years old when this happened and remember sadness at school the following day.  The sadness kind of went away but after seeing the money spent on the Saville Inquiry and the attention the Derry Shootings case received it got me thinking how the Birmingham case had been ignored when compared to other injustices in the UK.  When looking at Flipping Coins the words “following friends that we don’t trust” again makes me think of tensions that existed way back when, with friends whose parents were Irish and never knowing what people really felt and if their feelings were different to mine, of course, they were entirely justified.  We just never spoke about it.  To be completely honest we all got along very well at the time, it is thoughts that have come to me over the years.   My views have mellowed right out and I Tweeted Martin McGuinness shortly before his death thanking him for the work he had done in the Peace Process.  I know Twitter wasn’t around then, I’m just saying that feelings change.

“Marbles bang like gun shots, smashed glass, clash like gang members.”  So what is Casey talking about here?  I have heard of the gangs of Aston and West Bromwich but know nothing of this world.  I skip back over to Flipping Coins and “I’m trying to work out why I signed up, while you just blame it on your youth.” strike me.

I was born in 1964 and Casey in 1988 so we are worlds apart in many ways.  We are both from Birmingham, him Nechells and me Great Barr.  Orange and green to him may be nothing more than that his mother was Irish and his father Jamaican.

Dear Birmingham could be an anthem or love letter.  Sadness and loss of young life, postcodes as territories and Cadbury turning into Kraft are covered.

I asked Casey about his collection and this is what he had to say.

“This collection came about with the amazing support of Big White Shed, with Anne Holloway managing the project and supporting through the development process.

The decision to create a collection of poems based around my formative years in Nechells, was in some ways accidental.  I had been writing quite a lot at the time, and whilst I was putting together a set list for a performance I noticed the theme that was running through a lot of the poetry that I was writing at the time.  When I decided to put the poems together as a collection, I wrote a number of new poems with this in mind.  Working with Amerah Saleh, the main editor of the book, on shaping the poems individually and as a collection, helped me to see even more clear threads that weave through the poems, pulling the collection together.

When I think about where I am at now and what I, and the people who have supported the project, have achieved; I can only say that my lowest feeling about the whole thing is that my mom never got to see this happen, my biggest joy is that hopefully my son Xander will one day pick this book up and read it.”

To be honest, I think you should have a look yourself and see what it means to you.

Waiting at Bloomsbury Park book launch 1st September 2017, 6.30 pm, Waterstones, Birmingham

Booking required https://shop3.ticketscript.com/channel/html/get-products/rid/QC3923BV/eid/357695/date/2017-09-01/tsid/276342/sid/0/language/en?utm_source=ticketshop&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=WhatsApp

Baileys Rap And Poetry

http://www.baileysrapandpoetry.com

@MrCaseyBailey

Instagram: casey_bailey

http://www.amerahsaleh.co.uk/

http://lastminutephotographers.co.uk/

https://roundturnervisuals.com/

http://shivyfrancis.wixsite.com/shivniv01

The Woman getting to know Coventry

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I suppose it was inevitable that I would visit Coventry one day.  That was where my maker was born you see, but she never lived there.  She was going through documents after her Dad had died and that had put her in touch with the very beginning, a beginning that she does not know.  Spon End is where she would have been brought up. An area of maisonettes and flats not far from Coventry city centre.  What it’s like she can only guess at.  Walkways, posts  and bright red railings.  Pink and grey, they are very big inside she has been told.

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Spon End, Coventry, UK

She’d seen Moira’s Wet Fish place and, of course, she had to take me there.  A conservation place, looks cute actually, reminds her of Birmingham’s back to back houses, that kind of thing. What would Spon End have been like in the 60s and 70s?  moiras-wet-fish-for-blog-sm

I also had to meet Coventry’s Lady.  Fancy going around a city naked in protest, but I suppose that’s what you would do if you felt strong enough about something.

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Coventry, UK

There’s a pretty brutal background to Coventry, that’s for sure.  But you know what, no matter how brutal that background may have been you can always rise from the ashes.

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Funny that the bloke that did this sculpture has the same name as her Dad.

If you want to find out more about where she has taken me and who I have met have a look at Do I remind you of Madness.

Rock a-bye baby – a look at the work of JoJo Taylor

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01 silent night a5Women do abandon their children.  The cradle is a dangerous place.  Looking at JoJo Taylor’s cradle on inordinately long legs is uncomfortable.  Learning that it was once a child’s toy cradle that was then built up was a surprise.  So what does the unsafe structure represent?

JoJo spent time researching the issue known as Tokophobia, a fear of pregnancy.  The complexities of this are hard to imagine and must be very personal to those experiencing it.  Maybe it’s the women swinging widely in that cradle screaming in fear.

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Carrier bags often strewn across the street, disregarded.  Cord, a snail shell and and what JoJo describes as “beyond the intricate, ornate and pure” make up the work known as “A complete and irreversible separation”.  Has the woman given up all hope of conception, does she feel ‘throwaway’?

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Abandonment features in this work according to the artist in what she calls a ‘barren world’.  Yet somehow this work seems to be illuminating.  The key which starts a lullaby to send her child to sleep may be the key that sets a childless woman free.  Some have said that the love they feel for their child ‘breaks their heart’ and yet not all protect their children.  Maybe love is unconditional, at least for a child.

JoJo’s reference to abandonment is because “in the belly lies a home within a home, within a home:  a domed see-through belly, a nest and a snail shell but all of the homes are empty – abandoned – not necessarily by choice.”

Maybe there is meant to to be people who can’t have children because where would the rest of us be?  Perhaps we are meant to have those that can’t keep their children to fill the void of those who need.  The one’s who can throw out babies at the drop of a hat help those who cry each month when they bleed.  And not just the women.  Maybe we look after each other, through the seed.  The cradle is unsafe, it can be made of steel.  Those that want it so much and those that cannot hold it.  The pendulum swings wildly and then levels out.   Perhaps we end up where we belong.  All of us.

The interpretation of the artwork discussed above is not of the artist JoJo Taylor.  The writer is an adoptee which may have influenced the interpretation of JoJo Taylor’s work.

JoJo Taylor wordpress

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Crazy, Mad, Beautiful. Cherie Strong at the Reload Gallery, Leamington Spa 19/3/16 – 4/4/16

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01 Cherie 3x2Stumbling across The Girl’s Own Annual at a market in Oxford led to this amazing collection of Cherie Strong’s work being produced over a three month period.  Seeing is believing.  The women in the images are like beautiful pieces of fine china, but with tiny cracks.  You can see the Lonely Lassie, the Norwegian Girl and images which are exquisitely feminine with a vulnerability that we all possess.

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Cherie works with charcoal and massages her work to create subtle tones in the Crazy, Mad, Beautiful collection.  The piece that goes by that name is a pile of books that aren’t even glued together and could easily topple over.  A bit like us all really.

See the full catalogue here http://www.reloadgallery.com/collections/cherie-strong-solo-show-event-catalogue

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The show is from 19th March to 4th April at the Reload Gallery, 1a Augusta Place, Leamington Spa, CV32 5EL.  01926 429229

http://www.reloadgallery.com04 Cherie 3x2

https://www.facebook.com/CherieStrongart

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Art with a heart

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If you’re looking for a helping hand, look no further than Walsall College.  Especially when Anne Wylie gets involved.  The Walsall Arts Fest had donations from Launer London to raise funds for the Amber Walk Appeal, Operation Ollie : Let’s get him walking and the Lillie’s Innowalk Appeal.  It was important that the sale of the gorgeous wallet and purse be managed as best as possible and after discussing this with Anne, The Bid Win Help project was born.  Walsall Arts Fest artists had donated their work and students Izabela Dzierzak, Saahil Imran, George Stanton and Sam Lenton set about their business.  And business it was, mixed with art with a heart.  £2,001 was raised at a fundraiser dinner/auction, it would have been less but Anne didn’t want each child to have £666 so she made up the money herself.

This is what happened.  The HNC Business Studies students organised and promoted the event and it was attended by lecturers, Jeremy Bridgman and his wife who I sat next to as well as Assistant Principal Jayne Holt.  Peter Gordon and his wife were also there and there was plenty of business people including Suki and Paul Lalli of Solid Systems Global of Derby.

Cherie Strong Crazy, Mad, Beautiful image

Anne took to the stage as host for the night and work was donated by Cherie Strong who has her Crazy, Mad, Beautiful show at the Reload Gallery in Leamington Spa starting on 19th March 2016 until 4th April 2016.  A bit of friendly bidding took place for this prized piece and Jayne Holt walked away with that, the Launer London purse and a smile on her face.  But that was not outdone by Mr and Mrs Bridgman’s items which included the work of George A. Raggett known for his dry wit.

Anne on stageThe list goes on.  Work that was up for grabs included that of internationally acclaimed street artist JPS whose recent work can only be seen in the wet.

Seeing the combined force of big business such as Primark and Tesco come together with local Walsall businesses Southcart Books and Keep on Riding made this event something special.  The First Edition Harry Potter Book donated sold for £56 and the four rounds of golf donated by The Belfry was quickly taken by Suki and Paul Lalli who cannot be thanked enough for their contribution to the success of the night.  Anne’s husband watched with pride as she led the evening and Izabela wowed the group as she walked the art work around the room.

So many people to thank.  Here’s the links to their pages.  Jonny Arnold, Los Dave, M-One Art, Miz Brixz, Slightly Bruised Fruit, One of Sam’s, Korp, Martin Gethin Wild Star Boxing Gym, Carolyn Bayliss, Joseph Hicklin (have a look at the video made in the Fountain pub in Walsall as well), Rachel Mayfield, Bird, Deeds, Jerome’s Restaurant at Walsall College, Rowley’s Restaurant Derby and the New Art Gallery Walsall who donated a Ged Quinn book.  A special thanks goes to David Charles Bayes who is a marketing expert and was in touch with me as he was working with Launer London at the time.

We all came together Cheque presentationagain for the presentation of the cheques to the families made by Jatinder Sharma, Principal of Walsall College.  Tesco’s Community Champion, Trish Edwards who the students had worked with on bag packing in order to fundraise was there too.  At the same time the four students were given a Personal Development award for their efforts which lecturer Anne Wylie described as a “great response to a live brief”.  Indeed.

 

Are you happy with the flag?

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Multi, 2012 @Carolyn Bayliss

Multi was created in 2012 for a multicultural Britain.  The flags used in the design include Japan, Germany, Ireland, Bangladesh, India, France, Somalia, Romania, Pakistan and Nigeria.  There’s China at the centre and England (or Sweden, if you prefer, are in there too).  The top bit of the flag retains the colours of the Union flag with grey replacing the white, which could be about a greyed out identity.

Multi mug setThe mugs are available for £10 (plus £5 signed for postage) and come with a coaster and a keyring.  You can have a personalised mug as well if you want, just get in touch with the name or business name and I will get one produced for you.

Many thanks and best wishes,

Carolyn

paypal : £15 cebayliss@googlemail.com – as a gift please.

Available as open card and prints too.  Please get in touch to discuss if you are interested.

Pecking order

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Interesting day, for a couple of reasons.  The work of Janet Mendelsohn was discussed by panels and organisers and a snippet of the world of the prostitute was covered.  The pecking order in the film Prostitute was apparent after Sandra left Birmingham to make her fortune in London after meeting a high class call girl.  No-one will look out for you, that’s for sure and she returned to the streets she knew after being backed into a corner by the people who lived off her trade.

We were treated to a view of Janet Meldelsohn’s work at the end of the day and I spoke to a few different people.  One of them asked me my name, that was the woman at the centre of the event and as I left I quickly said ‘thanks’ to a director who asked me to visit again and dismissed me in .5 of a millisecond.

But that’s the pecking order.  The art industry is no different to any other industry.  Exhibitions are networking events.  Projects are carried out by people who know how to access funds distributed by organisations that know what they want to fund.  How political is it?  Probably the same as everything else.

Middle class people encourage working class people to come and see the world they inhabit.  No-one’s fault, it’s just how it is.  As impressive as Janet’s work is I wondered whether a working class person living where she photographed would have got their work recognised to this extent.  Yes, it is great for Birmingham to have these images and patronising at the same time.

Artists all over the country are doing their own stuff but how many get anywhere with it?  I suppose you just do it because you want to really and that’s it.  If it gets acknowledged it does and if not, you are doing what you want.  We have seen the Brit Pack turned into a corporation, not that I don’t like their stuff, especially the work of Gillian Wearing who after 30 years is still making engaging work.  Her early stuff, Dancing in Peckham and Homage to the Woman with the Bandaged Face who I saw yesterday down Walworth Road still stand out as a social commentary of people’s reactions and her more recent stuff where a middle aged woman adds 20 years to her age at a time when many women are ill at ease with lines on their face is impressive stuff and funny at the same time.

The community art projects are always going to be interesting covering the experiences that travellers and immigrants have as well as people who feel displaced from where their hearts lie.  I have wondered about the poor white person whose parents, grandparents and great grandparents are from this country fit into this.  Is there much out there about them as I haven’t seen much.  Are social problems more to do with class than race, is it more to do with income and by ignoring poor white people is that not leading to a sense of disadvantage in their group which may encourage a leaning towards the right wing?  These are the questions I would like to see addressed and maybe the people living in those conditions are the one’s in the best position to produce the art work and lead on the community projects.

Being heard will always be an issue.  I suppose that’s the pecking order.

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Celebrating a divided society?

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Segregate 2016 01 21 with nameThe red goblets on the shelf in the charity shop spoke to me.  I immediately saw the word ‘Segregate’ painted across them.  The lettering is split across the goblets in blue paint with white spots on it, thus creating the red, white and blue that we all know so well.

‘Segregate, 2013’ is part of the Raise a Glass series.  Pairs of glasses decorated in some way looking at social issues and asking whether segregation in society creates an opportunity for some to celebrate.  It is possible that the viewer is taken into the act of having a celebratory drink and the words form as the glasses are clinked in a toast.  Could that be a celebration of a divided society?  Chin chin.

If you are interested in this image please get in touch to discuss.

 

More than a few lines and a circle

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01 Stik Great Eastern Street, London

Great Eastern Street, London, UK

The psychology of Stik’s work I find interesting.  How can something painted on concrete which is basically a few lines and a circle somehow become comforting?  It is said to be about homelessness, but is it more to do with being looked after and how do we feel catching a glimpse from a train on the way to work or just walking down the street?

The image has become something more than ‘cute’.  Embraced by junior doctors at pickets where Stik has joined them it may be our ancestors looking out for us and trying to protect our rights at work.

The images do travel as well.  Unfortunately, not just in the imagination either.  Work from a community project in Gdansk, Poland has mysteriously found itself in a West London gallery.  The story continues and you can read more here.

http://www.stik.org

02 Stik Scrivens Street, London

Scrivens Street, London, UK